Turns out it's a lot cheaper to send your ashes to space than your living body.

What are you going to do with your body when you die? Have you considered shooting part of it into space and having it eventually burn up as a shooting star on re-entry? That's a thing you can totally do now thanks to a company called Elysium Space, and it's a lot cheaper than I would have guessed.

Steve Jobs, the co-founder of Apple computers and icon of the consumer electronics industry, has died. His visionary leadership of the company he founded, and the products produced under his tenure, have created and defined new markets that have changed the very landscape of technology.
There was much speculation about Jobs' health when, not two months ago, he stepped down as CEO of Apple. He'd held that position since 1996 when he returned to the company after being forced out in 1985. Though the founding of the company with Steve Wozniak is the stuff of Silicon Valley legend, it was his return that fostered a rebirth in the then floundering company. What followed were a series of fantastically successful and innovative products, such as the iPod in 2001, the iPhone in 2007, and the iPad in 2010. Under his leadership as CEO, the company has seen record profits and was briefly the most valuable company in the United States.
The spectre of Jobs' ill health has hung over the company since 2004, when he announced that he had pancreatic cancer.
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